Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India

Small Indigenous Fish Species (SIS) have historically been undervalued in the East Kolkata Wetlands (EKW) despite their high nutritional value, ecological importance, and livelihood contributions. Emerging evidence demonstrates that SIS play a critical role in enhancing pond productivity, nutrient c...

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Autores principales: Sathiskumar, Abinaya, Saha, Dipankar, Karnatak, G., Chakrabarti, A., Molla, S., Samanta, S., Das, B. K., Roy, M. N., Taron, Avinandan
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Water Management Institute 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179672
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author Sathiskumar, Abinaya
Saha, Dipankar
Karnatak, G.
Chakrabarti, A.
Molla, S.
Samanta, S.
Das, B. K.
Roy, M. N.
Taron, Avinandan
author_browse Chakrabarti, A.
Das, B. K.
Karnatak, G.
Molla, S.
Roy, M. N.
Saha, Dipankar
Samanta, S.
Sathiskumar, Abinaya
Taron, Avinandan
author_facet Sathiskumar, Abinaya
Saha, Dipankar
Karnatak, G.
Chakrabarti, A.
Molla, S.
Samanta, S.
Das, B. K.
Roy, M. N.
Taron, Avinandan
author_sort Sathiskumar, Abinaya
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Small Indigenous Fish Species (SIS) have historically been undervalued in the East Kolkata Wetlands (EKW) despite their high nutritional value, ecological importance, and livelihood contributions. Emerging evidence demonstrates that SIS play a critical role in enhancing pond productivity, nutrient cycling, and household food security, especially for low-income and wetland-dependent communities. The study underscores targeted policy support, capacity-building, financial access to scale production, and access to quality seeds for small farmers to adapt and rejuvenate SIS cultivation. Market assessments reveal strong and growing consumer demand for SIS, driven by superior taste and high micronutrient content, with wholesalers and retailers indicating readiness to expand trade. Technical assessments show that induced breeding of key indigenous catfishes is feasible under controlled hatchery conditions, provided water quality management, feed regulation, and brooder health are maintained. Strengthening hatchery infrastructure and farmer training is essential to improve seed availability, particularly given the current dependence on natural breeding. Production trials conducted under ICAR-Central Inland Fisheries Research Institute’s guidance confirm that species such as Shingi, Magur, Tengra, Punti, and Bata perform well in semi-intensive systems in nutrient-rich, shallow ponds. Polyculture models enhance ecological balance and productivity, typically yielding 200–400 kg/ha depending on stocking density, culture duration, and fish size. A SWOT assessment identifies strong market demand, low culture costs, and species resilience as key strengths; limited technical knowledge, seed scarcity, and harvesting difficulties as major weaknesses; and opportunities in species-specific protocols, hatchery development, and polyculture diversification. Threats include habitat degradation, siltation, invasive species, disease prevalence, poor water quality, and irregular sewage inflows.
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spelling CGSpace1796722026-01-13T02:14:36Z Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India Sathiskumar, Abinaya Saha, Dipankar Karnatak, G. Chakrabarti, A. Molla, S. Samanta, S. Das, B. K. Roy, M. N. Taron, Avinandan small-scale fisheries native organisms wetlands supply chains value chains Small Indigenous Fish Species (SIS) have historically been undervalued in the East Kolkata Wetlands (EKW) despite their high nutritional value, ecological importance, and livelihood contributions. Emerging evidence demonstrates that SIS play a critical role in enhancing pond productivity, nutrient cycling, and household food security, especially for low-income and wetland-dependent communities. The study underscores targeted policy support, capacity-building, financial access to scale production, and access to quality seeds for small farmers to adapt and rejuvenate SIS cultivation. Market assessments reveal strong and growing consumer demand for SIS, driven by superior taste and high micronutrient content, with wholesalers and retailers indicating readiness to expand trade. Technical assessments show that induced breeding of key indigenous catfishes is feasible under controlled hatchery conditions, provided water quality management, feed regulation, and brooder health are maintained. Strengthening hatchery infrastructure and farmer training is essential to improve seed availability, particularly given the current dependence on natural breeding. Production trials conducted under ICAR-Central Inland Fisheries Research Institute’s guidance confirm that species such as Shingi, Magur, Tengra, Punti, and Bata perform well in semi-intensive systems in nutrient-rich, shallow ponds. Polyculture models enhance ecological balance and productivity, typically yielding 200–400 kg/ha depending on stocking density, culture duration, and fish size. A SWOT assessment identifies strong market demand, low culture costs, and species resilience as key strengths; limited technical knowledge, seed scarcity, and harvesting difficulties as major weaknesses; and opportunities in species-specific protocols, hatchery development, and polyculture diversification. Threats include habitat degradation, siltation, invasive species, disease prevalence, poor water quality, and irregular sewage inflows. 2025-12-22 2026-01-12T10:36:59Z 2026-01-12T10:36:59Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179672 en Open Access application/pdf International Water Management Institute CGIAR Sustainable Animal and Aquatic Foods Program Sathiskumar, A.; Saha, D.; Karnatak, G.; Chakrabarti, A.; Molla, S.; Samanta, S.; Das, B. K.; Roy, M. N.; Taron, A. 2025. Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Sustainable Animal and Aquatic Foods Program. 69p.
spellingShingle small-scale fisheries
native organisms
wetlands
supply chains
value chains
Sathiskumar, Abinaya
Saha, Dipankar
Karnatak, G.
Chakrabarti, A.
Molla, S.
Samanta, S.
Das, B. K.
Roy, M. N.
Taron, Avinandan
Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India
title Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India
title_full Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India
title_fullStr Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India
title_full_unstemmed Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India
title_short Opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the East Kolkata wetlands, India
title_sort opportunities and potential of small indigenous fish species in the east kolkata wetlands india
topic small-scale fisheries
native organisms
wetlands
supply chains
value chains
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179672
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